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Remote assessment of atopic dermatitis is feasible with patient-provided images: Study


 

Remote assessment of atopic dermatitis (AD) severity is possible through the use of patient-provided clinical photos – opening a new avenue for improving access for patients, as well as the possibility of conducting remote clinical trials that would be less expensive and less burdensome for participants, according to investigators, who presented the study at the annual meeting of the International Society of Atopic Dermatitis.

Still, practical barriers need to be addressed, particularly the problem of image quality, noted study investigator Aviël Ragamin, MD, from the department of dermatology, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.

“Good-quality images are crucial, [and] in our study, patients didn’t have any incentive to provide images because they had already received their medical consultation,” he explained. He suggested that this problem could be overcome by providing technical support for patients and compensation for trial participants.

The study included 87 children (median age, 7 years), who were assessed for AD severity at an academic outpatient clinic. The in-person visit included assessment with the Eczema Area and Severity Index (EASI) score, as well as the collection of whole-body clinical images. Parents were then asked to return home and to provide their own clinical images and self-administered EASI assessments of their child for comparison. Four raters were asked to rate all images twice and to compare in-clinic and self-administered EASI scores based on the images.

At the in-clinic visit, the median EASI score of the group was 8.8. The majority of patients had moderate (46.6%) or severe (14.8%) AD. Roughly 40% of the patients had darker skin (Fitzpatrick skin types IV–VI).

Using Spearman rank correlation of 1,534 in-clinic and 425 patient-provided images, the study found good inter- and intra-rater reliability for clinical image assessment and strong agreement between images and the in-clinic EASI scores. The top outliers in the assessment were individuals with either darker skin or significant postinflammatory hyperpigmentation, which are “the most difficult cases to rate, based on images,” Dr. Ragamin noted.

There was only moderate correlation between the in-clinic and self-administered EASI scores, with a significant number of patients either underestimating or overestimating their AD severity, he added.

Overall, the main problem with remote assessment seems to be the feasibility of patients providing images, said Dr. Ragamin. Only 36.8% of parents provided any images at all, and of these, 1 of 5 were deemed too blurry, leaving just 13 for final assessment, he explained.

“Pragmatically, it’s tricky,” said Aaron Drucker, MD, a dermatologist at Women’s College Hospital and associate professor at the University of Toronto, who was asked to comment on the study. “It takes long enough to do an EASI score in person, let alone looking through blurry pictures that take too long to load into your electronic medical record. We know it works, but when our hospital went virtual [during the COVID pandemic] ... most of my patients with chronic eczema weren’t even sending me pictures.”

Regarding the utility of remote, full-body photography in clinical practice, he said, “There’s too many feasibility hoops to jump through at this point. The most promise I see is for clinical trials, where it’s hard to get people to come in.”

Dr. Ragamin and Dr. Drucker have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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